The New Zealand Herald

Labour’s Little emerges from Ratana unscathed

Church says party leader’s comments at pa ‘well received’, unlike last year

- Isaac Davison

Labour leader Andrew Little has emerged from his Ratana visit unscathed and confident his party’s relationsh­ip with the influentia­l Maori church has been restored.

Unlike last year, when Labour was accused of taking Maori for granted, Little’s remarks were “well received”, Ratana Church leadership said.

The fireworks were instead provided by economist and Opportunit­ies Party leader Gareth Morgan. At a usually respectful event, Morgan started a war of words with New Zealand First leader Winston Peters by calling him a racist and an “Uncle Tom”. That provoked Peters into calling him a “toothless sheep” and a “thinned-down Kim Dotcom”.

The Ratana event, which marks the birth date of the church’s founder, Tahupotiki Wiremu Ratana, is the traditiona­l start of the political year. Bill English made his first visit as Prime Minister on Monday and Opposition parties had a turn yesterday.

Little arrived at the pa near Wanganui under pressure to restore his party’s relationsh­ip with the Ratana Church. The Maori Party, which recently won the support of the Kingitanga Movement, made a strong pitch for Ratana’s support yesterday, calling for a “One Maori” movement.

Speaking on the pa, Little said he took the Labour-Ratana link seriously. Rather than simply turn up for the headline event, his MPs had been meeting the church regularly over the past 12 months.

He wooed the church’s 30,000 followers by pledging to financiall­y support its centennial celebratio­ns in 2018 if Labour was in Government. Ratana was “an important figure in the history of Maoridom” and “entitled to some support”.

He also pledged housing support for Ratana and Maori generally, saying a Labour Government would help improve Maori home ownership rates — now about 25 per cent.

In a 10-minute speech which included a brief Te Reo introducti­on, Little also criticised English’s message to Ratana to “reawaken the spirit of enterprise” among Maori because Government had “reached the limits of what government can do”.

Little said: “That’s an abdication of leadership and an abdication of the responsibi­lity of Government.”

Ratana Church senior secretary Piri Rurawhe told the Herald Little’s comments were “well received” and there was none of last year’s criticism.

Rurawhe did not agree with Maori Party co-leader Te Ururoa Flavell’s claim that the historic Labour-Ratana alliance was “finished”.

“The relationsh­ip is still there. The question we are asking ourselves is where do we move to from here?”

Later, after his speech, Little described the Maori Party’s claims about Ratana as “high-level trash talk”. He has all but ruled out a post-election coalition with the Maori Party and the Mana Movement, who are considerin­g an agreement to work together.

The Maori Party has agreed to step aside in the Te Tai Tokerau seat to allow Hone Harawira a clear run at the general election. Labour’s Kelvin Davis won the seat with a 743-vote majority in 2014 while the Maori Party candidate won 2579 votes.

The Green Party are also planning to run a candidate in Te Tai Tokerau for the first time this year, possibly taking more votes from Labour.

Davis said he was confident of a win in Te Tai Tokerau, and it would be a different contest because he had built up a bigger profile in Parliament.

“People are seeing me in a different light than they did three years ago.”

Davis has been one of Labour most high-profile MPs because of his outspoken criticism of private prison operator Serco and his defence of Kiwis in Australian detention centres.

Greens co-leader James Shaw also spoke at the pa. He said his party had made great strides in its relationsh­ip with Maori. A third of the Green caucus were now Maori and the party’s vote had tripled within the Maori electorate­s, he said.

The party is making a new push in the Maori electorate­s, and coleader Metiria Turei plans to run in Te Tai Tonga, pitting her against Labour’s Rino Tirakatene.

 ?? Picture / Mark Mitchell ?? Winston Peters (at rear, second from left) reacted strongly to criticism from Gareth Morgan (foreground) at the Ratana pa.
Picture / Mark Mitchell Winston Peters (at rear, second from left) reacted strongly to criticism from Gareth Morgan (foreground) at the Ratana pa.
 ?? Picture / NZME ?? The event at Ratana is the traditiona­l start of the political year in New Zealand.
Picture / NZME The event at Ratana is the traditiona­l start of the political year in New Zealand.
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